Share of Voice (SOV)
Share of voice (SOV) is the percentage of total visibility in your market that your brand owns compared to competitors, measured within a channel — search, social, paid ads, PR, or, increasingly, AI-generated answers. If ten brands compete for a topic and your content earns three of every ten mentions or rankings, your share of voice is 30%.
How share of voice is measured
Share of voice is always measured inside a specific channel and topic, not as a single global number. The general formula is your brand's visibility divided by the total visibility of all brands competing for the same space, expressed as a percentage. What counts as "visibility" depends on the channel:
- Search SOV — the share of organic rankings (or clicks) your pages hold across a set of target keywords versus competitors. Closely tied to topical authority.
- Social SOV — your share of mentions, hashtags, or engagement in a conversation versus other brands.
- Paid SOV — impression share: how often your ads show for a query out of all the times they could have.
- PR / media SOV — your share of press mentions or coverage on a topic against competitors.
- AI share of voice — how often AI answer engines like ChatGPT, Perplexity, or Google AI Overviews cite or mention your brand when answering questions in your category. This is the newest and least-contested surface; see AI citation.
Why share of voice matters for a small team
Raw rankings or follower counts tell you how you're doing in isolation; share of voice tells you how you're doing relative to the competitors a buyer is actually choosing between. That relative view is what predicts growth — research on advertising has long found that brands whose share of voice exceeds their share of market tend to grow, while those under-investing tend to shrink. The same logic applies to organic visibility: out-publishing and out-ranking your category is how a smaller brand takes ground.
For a one-person company or a lean team, share of voice is also a sharper goal than "do more marketing." It forces you to pick a niche narrow enough that you can realistically own a large slice of it, rather than being invisible in a huge one. Winning 40% of voice on a tightly-defined topic beats 1% of a broad market every time.
How to grow share of voice without a big budget
You don't outspend a bigger competitor for share of voice — you out-focus them. A small team grows SOV by going narrow and compounding:
- Pick a niche you can dominate — define the topic tightly enough that consistent publishing can earn a real share, not a rounding error.
- Build depth, not one-off posts — cover a topic thoroughly so engines and buyers see you as the authority; this is what SEO content and content clusters are for.
- Optimize for AI answers early — AI share of voice is still under-contested, so structuring content to be cited via generative engine optimization is a cheap way to own emerging visibility.
- Measure relative, not absolute — track your rankings and mentions against named competitors, not just your own trend line, so you know whether you're gaining ground.
FAQ
- How do you calculate share of voice?
- Divide your brand's visibility in a channel by the total visibility of all competing brands, then multiply by 100 to get a percentage. "Visibility" is channel-specific: organic rankings or clicks for search, mentions or engagement for social, impression share for paid ads, and citations for AI answers. Always measure it within one channel and topic at a time, not as a single global figure.
- What is a good share of voice?
- There's no universal number — it depends on how many competitors share the space and how narrowly you've defined the topic. The useful benchmark is relative: a share of voice higher than your share of market is a growth signal, while a share below it tends to predict decline. For a small team, owning a large slice of a tight niche is far more valuable than a tiny slice of a broad one.
- What is AI share of voice or share of model?
- AI share of voice (sometimes called share of model) measures how often AI answer engines — ChatGPT, Perplexity, Gemini, Claude, Google AI Overviews — mention or cite your brand when answering questions in your category, relative to competitors. As buyers increasingly ask an AI before they search, it's becoming a leading indicator of visibility, and it's still early enough to be winnable. See generative engine optimization.
- How is share of voice different from market share?
- Market share is the percentage of actual sales or customers you hold; share of voice is the percentage of attention or visibility you hold. Share of voice is a leading indicator — it tends to move before market share does — which is why brands track it to predict growth rather than just report past results.
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